Bolsover Home Grown Fruit Preserving Company.
Carr Vale Jam factory.
Original Railway Plans from cloth originals show Factory (top one third in).
(All photographs copyright the author A.N. Bridgewater).

Date unknown. Copyright Unknown.
The site is now in the process of being demolished to make way for a housing development by Gleeson Homes.

Built late in the 1890’s and sited on a siding in the yard of Carr Vale Station the factory had the best location to utilise local transport in and out by the railway. It had as much water as it needed from the local water supply of the Bolsover & District Water Company formed in 1904. Local fruit was grown and as demand grew fruit was imported from other growing areas including Lincolnshire and surrounding areas. Coal was in plentiful supply locally and was turned into gas to fire the boilers in the boiling room from the Bolsover Gas, Light and Coke Company, electricity was supplied by the Bolsover Urban Council and sugar was imported from Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire beet growers. Labour in the form of women was also in plentiful supply from coal mining families of Bolsover, Carr Vale & New Bolsover.
Although fruit production was seasonal vegetables were canned in later years giving the seasonal work an extension. Produce was sent out of the factory to local shops but one can postulate that this trade may have been nationwide and possibly worldwide wherever the need for this type of produce was needed. During the two World Wars the tins, jars and bottles of Bolsover preserve would have been a welcome sight to ‘our boys’.
All manner of fruit and some vegetables were processed but many locals I have spoken to remember with affection the summers when the strawberry jam was being produced as the sweet smell of the cooking strawberries was everywhere in the air around the factory.
The factory was run by Sidebothams at one stage and they had a series of delivery vans operating from the factory when the railway closed in the 1950’s.
Upon closure in about 1959 the factory was purchased by Walker & Hall Master Cutlery makers from Sheffield. They produced many types of flatware or cutlery including silver plate and it may well have been this firm that extended the factory to its present size.
Until total closure in 1995 Mercol Products Ltd. Used the site, they then moved to Grassmoor and the site was boarded up and demolished for a housing development in the Autumn of 2007..

2002, the station house with the factory in the background.

The newer part of the building in 2005.

Offices left and the domed roof building extension. 2005.
It would appear that the Jam Factory was built in stages, the plan above showing the first early phase housing the gas powered stainless steel vats with the offices looking into the cooking area.
To the left of the roofs of the following photographs are the roof lites to provide natural light from the sun to illuminate the work area. To the right the roofs are slate tiled.
Water is collected from the roof area and finds its way out of these holes.
2007


Note the platform to load the produce onto the railway which ran alongside the unit.



Cast iron stanchions hold up wooden joists to support the roof.
The later building possibly to house further machinery to can, bottle and fill jars as the factory expanded its sales. It might be however that it was built later after the jam factory closed. I will let you know about that. On the 1938 O.S. Maps this building is not shown. It does appear on the 1962 O.S. Maps.

2007

Through the round window, not so much light needed now in the new building.

Cast iron struts and bars hold up the domed roof of timber planking with a felt weathered top.

2007
Offices were built around the same time as the rounded roof building.

The offices 2007 prior to demolition.


On the 1962 Ordnance Survey map a building is shown here, whether or not it is this one remains to be seen.
The following Photographs are COPYRIGHT http://www.picturethepast.org.uk/ and appear on this site courtesy of ‘IMAGES OF DERBY DERBYSHIRE NOTTINGHAM NOTTINGHAMSHIRE OLD AND NEW

The office staff

Boiling up the fruit in stainless steel vats.

Please let me have you comments, did you work here do you have any old photographs I could put on here?